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What do Employers Really Want?. Nancy Dilthey Manager, University Relations Johnson & Johnson January 25, 2006 - CIEC. Short Answer:. Employers want it all!. Employers Want:. Top students for our openings Great partnerships with Universities Great reputation on campus
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What do Employers Really Want? Nancy Dilthey Manager, University Relations Johnson & Johnson January 25, 2006 - CIEC
Short Answer: Employers want it all!
Employers Want: • Top students for our openings • Great partnerships with Universities • Great reputation on campus • Widespread knowledge of our business • Pipeline of diverse candidates
In a perfect world… • Students are: • Prepared • Diverse • Passionate • Articulate • Flexible
Reality for Employers: • Hampered by: • Just-in-Time recruiting • Budget constraints • Limited resources • Constant change
Successful Partnerships Students Career Services Employers Seek guidance Liaison / Partner Partner / Provide Opportunities
Objective – We all want to help Students: • Develop Strengths • Differentiate Themselves • Learn Keys to Success
Early college Assess your skills Utilize Campus Resources Develop Strong Resume Research Employers Getting the job Differentiate yourself Be a professional Demonstrate passion, flexibility & leadership Student Roadmap to Success
Students: Assess your skills • Honest assessment • Consider aptitude testing • Career aspirations • Personal development / strengths • Develop roadmap
Utilize University Career Resources • Career Services & Co-op Office • Resume critiques • Mock Interviews / videotape • Company Info Sessions • Career Fairs
Easy to read format Error Free Emphasizes strengths Accurate depiction Constantly update Readily available Differentiate yourself Develop your resume
Research Employers • Start early • Be open minded (location, industry, etc.) • Look for culture fit • Have a Plan “B” • Network, network, network
Differentiate Yourself! On Campus: • Look for ways to demonstrate: • Teamwork • Leadership • Campus Involvement
Differentiate yourself – campus: • Leadership role in Student organizations • Volunteering • Mentoring others • Secure scholarships • Work closely with Professors
Differentiate yourself – Internship or Co-op • Demonstrate your potential to company • Teamwork • Take initiative • Professionalism: Attitude and Appearance
Differentiate yourself – Internship or Co-op • Ask for feedback • Be adaptable to change • Act ethically/ responsibly • Learn other areas of the company • Network within your department
The Importance of Networking • It’s never too early to start! • Involvement in dept/student boards • Career Fairs (volunteer/follow up) • Company Presentations • Seek out alums of companies
Networking – on job: • Build a co-op community • Learn about other dept’s • Seek out alums – ask for advice • Offer to champion company upon return to campus
Some Do’s: • Follow chain of command/co protocol • Act professional at all times • Take initiative • Demonstrate great teamwork • Be passionate about your work • “Ask” for the job
And, some don’ts…. • Email the CEO for ANY reason • Compare salaries with co-workers • Trash company or co-workers • Surf inappropriate web sites • Be late or no-show • Misuse company funds/property
Successful Partnerships Students Career Services Employer Liaison / Partner Seek guidance Partner / Provide Opportunities
Ways to Partner with Employers • Understand their culture • Flexibility • Understand business needs • Provide campus statistics • Responsiveness
Creating a University Program • Take stock of the following: -Budget -Hiring needs (disciplines, UG/MBA, volume, etc.) -Technology tools -Brand / reputation -Communication vehicles
Before You Go to Campus • Do your homework • What are your goals / expectations? • Demands and requirements of students • Advance knowledge of school • Advance knowledge of campus activities • Understand recruitment cycles
Best Practices • “Top Down” approach / commitment • Continuous improvement • Program Flexibility • Communication to University Partners/Students • Utilize campus team model, inc. alums, interns • Consistent presence • Established target schools
Levels of Engagement – Who are you? RECRUIT ONLY RECRUIT PLUS STRATEGIC PARTNER
Levels of Engagement • Recruit Only – 1 or 2x year – Fairs & Interviews • Recruit Plus – Recruitment activities; plus some relationship building • Strategic Partner – Full commitment to University over time. Recruitment activities plus strong partnerships, sponsorships, engagement across all levels
Keys to Success • Know your campus • Interns are your most important resource • Flexibility • Communication – Internal & External • Evaluate Results • Continuous Improvement
Closing • Great partnerships take time Yield – top students Strong relationships with schools Stay active in the field – NACE, CEIA, Regional Assn’s, etc. Network and build relationships
Q & A